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(1818–1905). During the American Civil War, John Henninger Reagan served as postmaster general of the Confederate States of America. Later, as a member of the U.S. Congress, he coauthored the bill creating the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC).

Reagan was born in Sevier county, Tennessee, on October 8, 1818. In 1839 he moved to Texas and fought against the Cherokee. He worked as a surveyor and studied law, serving as a justice of the peace and a county judge even before he was admitted to the bar in 1848. He quickly became one of the leading lawyers in Texas. In 1847 Reagan won a seat in the state legislature, and in 1852 he was elected as a district judge. He won a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1856 and was reelected two years later.

In 1861 Reagan resigned from Congress and became deeply involved in the secession movement. He was first elected to the Texas secession convention and then sent by that convention to the Congress of the Confederacy. By March 1861 he was postmaster general of the Confederacy, a position he held until the Confederacy collapsed in 1865. He kept the post office running efficiently and, at the end of the war, also served as treasury secretary.

In the last days of the war Reagan was captured by the Union. He was imprisoned for several months at Fort Warren in Boston Harbor, where he wrote an influential letter to President Andrew Johnson—warning against the harsh Reconstruction measures proposed by the Republicans. An open letter to the people of Texas, urging them to accept the results of the war, made him temporarily unpopular at home. Nevertheless, voters sent him back to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1875, and he was reelected continuously thereafter. In 1887 he was elected to the U.S. Senate. As a congressman Reagan played a key role in the establishment of the ICC, the first regulatory agency in the United States. It regulated the railroads and, later, motor carriers, inland waterways, and oil companies.

In 1891 Reagan was appointed to the Texas Railroad Commission. He served as its chairman from 1897 to 1903, when he retired from public life. He died in Palestine, Texas, on March 6, 1905.

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